Well, for one, Debian and Debian-based distros make your home directory readable by everyone by default. Security is riddled by traps. If you can afford best possible level of isolation, why not do it?
I don't know what's worse: that they did that, or that the operating system allowed them to do that. On both macOS and Windows according to my understanding that should require admin rights, normally, not to mention the…
Maybe it's trivial what I'm saying, but hiring the most skilled available person does not solve the skill disparity.
Even the famously brought up cases of solo projects often end up hiring help once they become popular. Stardew Valley and Dwarf Fortress come to mind. I think for the later stages it's common to contract someone for…
It's not the ability that's missing; it's those days.
Generally the same point about having a common vocabulary in tech work. Sometimes it's about stuff that's obvious to both parties in one way or another - but the name is what ties it together (heh).
This is all nice for as long there are just _some_ unjust laws, but the means of such enforcement will inevitably be exploited by actually evil people, who given such tool will get you many, many more unjust laws not…
Ahh, AI. All ratchet and clank.
Yes, that's why I think responsible people should truthfully disclose.
This doesn't disagree with the poster above: they're saying that taking liability is a sign of belief in AGI. You're saying that lack of liability doesn't mean there's no AGI. Logically these two are not exclusive. p =>…
I am not well versed in Android or iPhone software development, but yes, I don't believe that making a non-bloated mobile app is pushing the frontier of software engineering. There could be some arguments made somewhere…
R&D spend? In messaging product? Sorry, but these companies spend much more effort on making sure their product is walled off and incompatible with everything than giving it any actual quality.
AND being able to further reprogram the device to gain control of the PC. This is negligence of the highest kind.
Except swap is, like, opposite of RAM disk. That said, still an nice and fun concept. Though caching got better since I assume :)
It's _badly intentioned_ (and not just UI). Blackmailing you with losing labelling, which worked fine before all that is a clear proof. So "malware" is not really so far off the point.
Unless you changed both job and country.
Even in healthcare alone, I would question whether the impact was net positive. You have to balance the "access to information" with how people need to deal with false information, health charlatans, ads shoving then…
I'm sure a lot of the crowd that's using Windows as more than a browser OS would also find things to complain about. There's a ton of differences in how to do things at OS level, having to find other software, from time…
To be precise, I meant the open source as a whole, as this is what the parent poster mentioned. I don't know about Tridge, I would review the changes first to see what happened there. For rsync in general, I would say…
I don't think using AI as such is the core problem here. It's the type of use. Vibe coding, brain off coding and blind trust are the issue, and an issue everywhere, just enterprises were never really about quality in…
How so? Do you have rights to your data in secure enclaves?
GPU RAM, clearly. At least that's where my mind went.
>Anyway, just find it strange to be so militantly anti a certain tech. You know, that's fair. I'm much more against super-rich investing hundreds of billions in the things they don't understand, creating massive…
It's mostly for Uber Eats. As long as you order 2-3 times per month it might pay back (depending on your location and where do you order from).
Breaking news: Number of potential combinations of set elements rumored to _far exceeds_ the cardinality of said set! Populace baffled!
Well, for one, Debian and Debian-based distros make your home directory readable by everyone by default. Security is riddled by traps. If you can afford best possible level of isolation, why not do it?
I don't know what's worse: that they did that, or that the operating system allowed them to do that. On both macOS and Windows according to my understanding that should require admin rights, normally, not to mention the…
Maybe it's trivial what I'm saying, but hiring the most skilled available person does not solve the skill disparity.
Even the famously brought up cases of solo projects often end up hiring help once they become popular. Stardew Valley and Dwarf Fortress come to mind. I think for the later stages it's common to contract someone for…
It's not the ability that's missing; it's those days.
Generally the same point about having a common vocabulary in tech work. Sometimes it's about stuff that's obvious to both parties in one way or another - but the name is what ties it together (heh).
This is all nice for as long there are just _some_ unjust laws, but the means of such enforcement will inevitably be exploited by actually evil people, who given such tool will get you many, many more unjust laws not…
Ahh, AI. All ratchet and clank.
Yes, that's why I think responsible people should truthfully disclose.
This doesn't disagree with the poster above: they're saying that taking liability is a sign of belief in AGI. You're saying that lack of liability doesn't mean there's no AGI. Logically these two are not exclusive. p =>…
I am not well versed in Android or iPhone software development, but yes, I don't believe that making a non-bloated mobile app is pushing the frontier of software engineering. There could be some arguments made somewhere…
R&D spend? In messaging product? Sorry, but these companies spend much more effort on making sure their product is walled off and incompatible with everything than giving it any actual quality.
AND being able to further reprogram the device to gain control of the PC. This is negligence of the highest kind.
Except swap is, like, opposite of RAM disk. That said, still an nice and fun concept. Though caching got better since I assume :)
It's _badly intentioned_ (and not just UI). Blackmailing you with losing labelling, which worked fine before all that is a clear proof. So "malware" is not really so far off the point.
Unless you changed both job and country.
Even in healthcare alone, I would question whether the impact was net positive. You have to balance the "access to information" with how people need to deal with false information, health charlatans, ads shoving then…
I'm sure a lot of the crowd that's using Windows as more than a browser OS would also find things to complain about. There's a ton of differences in how to do things at OS level, having to find other software, from time…
To be precise, I meant the open source as a whole, as this is what the parent poster mentioned. I don't know about Tridge, I would review the changes first to see what happened there. For rsync in general, I would say…
I don't think using AI as such is the core problem here. It's the type of use. Vibe coding, brain off coding and blind trust are the issue, and an issue everywhere, just enterprises were never really about quality in…
How so? Do you have rights to your data in secure enclaves?
GPU RAM, clearly. At least that's where my mind went.
>Anyway, just find it strange to be so militantly anti a certain tech. You know, that's fair. I'm much more against super-rich investing hundreds of billions in the things they don't understand, creating massive…
It's mostly for Uber Eats. As long as you order 2-3 times per month it might pay back (depending on your location and where do you order from).
Breaking news: Number of potential combinations of set elements rumored to _far exceeds_ the cardinality of said set! Populace baffled!